Hello everyone!
So, to change the subject entirely, I just discovered that this is the 10 year anniversary of foundation-l/wikimedia-l!
Foundation-l was founded in April 2004, and was renamed to wikimedia-l two years ago: http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/wikimedia-l/
Foundation-l was originally an offshoot from wikipedia-l, which is where the first discussions about policies and issues on the projects were held. It was proposed as a separate list in order to discuss "Wikimedia-wide issues".
Over the years, we have had debates on every subject under the sun. We've gone through high points, hammering out constructive policies and debates, sharing our experiences as encyclopedists and free culture enthusiasts; and we've gone through low points, with allegations of bad behavior flying left and right and people belaboring points beyond all reason. Sometimes -- usually, in fact -- it's both at once, in different threads. The list has been a place to send ideas, manifestos, and information as well as a place to discuss with others who share our passions.
We've debated the list and its place a lot over the years. We have talked about moderation, but rarely done anything with it. We've implemented posting limits (still in place: 30 posts/person/month); enforced posting limits; forgotten to enforce posting limits; talked about stricter or weaker limits. We've split sub-topic lists out; we've merged lists back together. We've debated the cost in time and energy of each email, the burden that being subscribed to the list means, how impossible to keep up it is. We've tried summaries, filters, translations. We've talked about languages, and tried many times (unsuccessfully to date) to make the list truly multilingual. We've called each other out on bad behavior, and every once in a while we've remembered to praise each other too.
The list has chronicled the growth of the Wikimedia Foundation from the days when we celebrated raising $50,000 in the fundraiser and held the first board elections to today. And it has chronicled the growth of the Wikimedia movement, across languages and communities, and of the projects, as they changed from rather odd novelties to a core part of the internet.
People on the list have come and gone. Sometimes, for months or years at a time, someone will post on nearly every thread and every subject. Usually they eventually taper off, and then someone new will take their place, making the rest of the subscribers wonder "how do they have so much time?!" For those who have been subscribed for a long time, these names are recognizable because of their many posts and their (in)famous dedication to the list. (Wouldn't it be fun if we could get those folks all together in person, for a Wikimania panel or something?) Many subscribers never post; others are able to find a balance. It is a truism that those who rarely post often send the most thoughtful mails.
People have used the list to join the movement, to get to know others. They've also used the list to quit the movement, sometimes loudly and angrily, sometimes thoughtfully, sometimes silently; it is always sad when this happens. Sometimes, people have used the list to return (welcome back!)
The list can be endlessly irritating. It's a source of conversation: "wow, the list is blowing up right now, can you believe it?!" It also can be a source of connection with other people who we may only know through their emails, and a source of joy and inventive new ideas. It is disconnected from the on-wiki communities, but is connected too. It serves as a place to share with people across our movement, when there are few general channels to do so. It is thousands of mails in thousands of in-boxes, over many years.
The list is ours, our commons, ours to take care of and to try to make better. Happy anniversary, Wikimedia-l.
-- phoebe